Entrepreneurial Social Infrastructure: A Necessary Ingredient
Cornelia Butler Flora and
Jan L. Flora
The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 1993, vol. 529, issue 1, 48-58
Abstract:
Local communities are faced with increasing responsibilities to provide for their own well-being and development. With fewer resources, communities need more successful ways of uniting people and resources. Entrepreneurial social infrastructure (ESI) is a necessary ingredient for successfully linking physical resources and leadership for community development. ESI includes three elements: symbolic diversity, resource mobilization, and quality of networks. Instead of fostering perverse conflict or superficial harmony, symbolic diversity inspires communities to engage in constructive controversy to arrive at workable community decisions by focusing on community processes, depersonalization of politics, and broadening of community boundaries. Resource mobilization involves generating some surplus within the community beyond basic subsistence with relative equity in resource and risk distribution, investment by residents of their own private capital locally, and collective investment in the community (willingness of residents to tax themselves). Quality networks include establishing linkages with others in similar circumstances and developing vertical networks to provide diverse sources—both within and outside the community—of experience and knowledge.
Date: 1993
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:sae:anname:v:529:y:1993:i:1:p:48-58
DOI: 10.1177/0002716293529001005
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